Go Strings: Difference between revisions

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==<span id='Concatenation_Operator'></span>Concatenation Operator <tt>+</tt>==
==<span id='Concatenation_Operator'></span>Concatenation Operator <tt>+</tt>==


[[Go Concepts - Operators#.2B|Concatenation operator +]] concatenates two strings together. Since Go is strong typed, using the concatenation operation between a string and an int, for example, won't work, the int won't be automatically converted to string, Java style.
The concatenation operator <code>[[Go Concepts - Operators#.2B|+]]</code> joins two strings together, producing a new immutable string instance. An attempt to use the concatenation operation between a <code>string</code> and an <code>int</code>, for example, won't work, because the <code>int</code> won't be automatically converted to <code>string</code> the way Java does.
 
<syntaxhighlight lang='go'>
<pre>
s := "abc"
"a" + "b"
s2 := "xyz"
</pre>
println(s + s2)
</syntaxhighlight>


=String Manipulation and Processing in Go=
=String Manipulation and Processing in Go=

Revision as of 02:23, 20 August 2023

External

Internal

Overview

The main "use case" for strings is to hold characters made for printing, things you see, and read.

In Go, strings are sequence of bytes that represent characters, encoded using the character encoding standard Unicode, and, by default, the UTF-8 character encoding scheme. Go refers to Unicode code points as runes. For the rune type, also see integral types.

Strings are immutable.

String Variable Declaration

The pre-declared type identifier for strings is string.

var s string                // string type declaration without initialization
s = "example 1"             // initialization after declaration
var s2 string = "example 2" // variable initialization in declaration
var s3 = "example 3"        // variable initialization with type inference
s4 := "example 4"           // short variable declaration

String Literals

A string literal is a string constant produced by concatenating characters. Go has two kind of string literals: interpreted string literals and raw string literals.

Interpreted String Literals

An interpreted string literal is represented in Go code as a sequence of characters enclosed in double quotes. Each character is a byte, a rune, an UTF-8 code point. Interpreted strings allow escaping (\n or \t).

s := "something\nsomething else"
println(s)

Raw String Literals

Raw string literals are sequences of characters enclosed in backquotes (backticks) `. All characters between the pair of matching backticks is taken literally, back slashes have no special meaning and new lines can appear. Carriage return characters inside raw string literals are discarded.

s := `This
is an \n \t
example of 
raw string literal`

println(s)

will produce:

This
is an \n \t
example of 
raw string literal

Empty String

emptyString1 := ""
emptyString2 := ``

Operators

Indexing Operator []

The indexing operator [] returns a byte (uint8)

Strings are zero-based indexed. If the index is out of bounds, the runtime generates a run-time panic:

panic: runtime error: index out of range [6] with length 3

Concatenation Operator +

The concatenation operator + joins two strings together, producing a new immutable string instance. An attempt to use the concatenation operation between a string and an int, for example, won't work, because the int won't be automatically converted to string the way Java does.

s := "abc"
s2 := "xyz"
println(s + s2)

String Manipulation and Processing in Go

TO DEPLETE

Overview

Uninitialized variable value: TO check: "" (empty string).

String Equality

String equality is tested with the == operator:

var s string = "something"

if s == "something" then {
    ...
}

String Operators and Functions

String Length

len()

Conversion of a byte to string

Conversion between bytes and strings

Reading with a string with a Reader

TODO

strings.NewReader()

See Go_Package_strings#NewReader.28.29